Burn injuries can take you through weeks of appointments, wound care, and pain management, and the medical picture can keep changing as skin heals and scarring develops. Insurance companies may still press for final answers early on, even though burn treatment almost never goes quickly.
Work can get disrupted at the same time, and family members may have to handle rides, paperwork, and day-to-day help while you deal with recovery. Freeman Law Firm can take over the insurance side of the case, gather the records that show what the burn has required over time, and push back when an adjuster tries to force decisions before your treatment picture settles.
If you experienced a burn injury because of the negligence of another party you may be entitled to compensation. Call our burn injury attorneys in Renton at (206) 880-2454 to find out if you have a case.
No matter the cause of your burn injury, our team has the experience needed to identify the right proof, the right responsible parties, and the insurance coverage that can pay for the harm you’re dealing with. Below are some of the common burn case types we’ve seen.
Each case is different and our strategy is customized in a way that will maximize the compensation we recover on your behalf.
Liability in a burn case comes down to control and proof. Our Washington burn injury attorneys identify who controlled the hazard that caused the burn, then build the case around the records and physical evidence that show what happened and why that party bears responsibility. Correct identification also points to the insurance coverage that can pay, which can limit how much money is available to cover medical bills and lost income.
Burn injuries in rental housing and other properties can trace back to delayed repairs, unsafe conditions, or safety equipment that didn’t work, and responsibility may fall on the owner, the manager, or both depending on who controlled the condition that caused the burn.
Work-related burns can point to a contractor, vendor, or another company on site that created the hazard or controlled the area, which can support a case outside workers’ comp when a third party caused the burn.
Burns in restaurants, stores, and other public-facing spaces can come from unsafe practices, missing warnings, staff training gaps, or hazards left in customer areas, and internal records can show whether the business knew about the risk before someone got hurt.
Burns tied to products can stem from a defect or inadequate warnings, and preserving the product and its condition after the burn can connect the failure to the injury and medical treatment.
Under a doctrine referred to as “comparative fault” or “comparative negligence,” Washington allows more than one party to share responsibility for a burn injury, and insurance companies sometimes lean on that rule to push blame onto the injured person. Our burn injury experts look at how the burn actually happened so that we can separate speculation from proof. We will challenge any attempts to reduce recovery by overstating your role in the event.
Washington follows a “pure” version of this rule, meaning your recovery gets reduced by your percentage of fault rather than eliminated, even if another party argues you share most of the responsibility.
Burn cases usually come down to one thing in the end: evidence that shows what caused the burn and who had control over the hazard before you got hurt. Freeman Law Firm builds that part of the case from the sources below, since each one answers a different question that liability arguments rely on.
Burn care can mean ER treatment, hospital stays, wound care, grafts, medication, and follow-up visits, and future care can include scar treatment, therapy to restore function, and procedures a doctor recommends as healing progresses.
Time away from work can start with missed shifts and can turn into reduced hours, a job change, or restrictions that limit what you can do, and a strong case ties those losses to medical restrictions and employer records.
Scars can tighten skin, limit movement, and change how clothing fits or how you tolerate heat and friction, and pain can continue after the wound closes through nerve damage, sensitivity, and ongoing treatment needs.
Burn injuries can leave anxiety, sleep disruption, panic symptoms, or trauma reactions tied to heat, alarms, or medical care, and therapy records can connect those symptoms to the burn and the recovery experience.
A consult can document scarring, options for revision, expected outcomes, and cost, and that documentation can prevent an adjuster from treating scar care as optional or cosmetic.
Compression garments, topical treatments, laser therapy, physical therapy, and follow-up procedures can add up over time, and tracking frequency, duration, and cost gives the damages section a solid foundation.
Washington can assign fault across more than one party, and payment usually comes from the insurance coverage tied to each responsible party. Freeman Law Firm builds the liability proof against each party so an adjuster can’t pin the whole loss on one target and use that to shrink the total recovery.
Hold off when possible, since repairs, cleanup, and replacement can erase the condition that caused the burn. We can send preservation notices and arrange documentation or inspection so you can move forward without losing proof.
Your own coverage sometimes becomes part of the picture depending on where the burn happened and what policies exist, and that can create reimbursement issues later. Freeman Law Firm tracks coverage and flags payback risks in the early stages so that the final numbers don’t get cut down after the case resolves.
Scar care usually means ongoing treatment, therapy, and future procedures, and the case value depends on records that show expected care and cost. Freeman Law Firm uses medical documentation and specialist opinions to tie future scar care to the burn injury.
Insurance companies look for reasons to argue the burn healed quickly or caused less harm, and gaps in care or prior issues give them angles to push. Freeman Law Firm builds the medical timeline around provider records and treatment notes so the case reflects what you actually dealt with.
Washington’s statute of limitations for personal injury gives most burn injury cases three years from the date of the injury to start a lawsuit, but certain situations can change that deadline, like cases with minors or claims against a government entity. A quick review with one of our lawyers can confirm the correct deadline based on the facts of your case.
A burn injury can leave you trying to heal while someone else works to reduce what they pay. Our burn injury lawyers build cases around proof, responsibility, and the full scope of harm so the outcome reflects what you actually went through and what the burn will continue to cost you.
If you experienced a burn injury caused by someone else’s negligence, call Freeman Law Firm, Inc. at (206) 880-2454 to find out whether you have a case.
